Another reason why government shouldn't pick winners and losers in the economy

In August, U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid hosted his fifth annual National Clean Energy Summit in Las Vegas. Delivering the keynote address, former president Bill Clinton claimed that if every state had a renewable-energy standard it would "put a lot of people back to work."

The Silver State North solar plant located near Primm, for example, is to receive $50 million in tax credits from the stimulus — but has only two full-time employees.

The Cresent Dunes Solar Project in Tonopah received a $737 million stimulus loan, but once construction is complete, it will only employ 40 to 50 people.

The Copper Mountain solar plant in Boulder City employs only five people, but took in $40 million in federal handouts. President Obama even visited this plant in March to tout it as an example of a good government "investment."

And — although each permanent job required more than $10 million from federal taxpayers — these are the success stories.

As the country saw with Solyndra, many green-energy companies, even after massive government subsidies, end up in bankruptcy.

For instance, auditors say Nevada Geothermal Power, which has received $145 million in federal subsidies, is on the verge of failure. The latest company audit questions the "company's ability to continue as a going concern." The company's survival, wrote auditors, will depend "on its available cash and its ability to continue to raise funds...."

Worse, these federal "investments" are actually increasing electricity prices in Nevada and making the state less attractive to job creators.

Nevada already has the highest residential rates in the Intermountain West. That's because state-mandated renewable energy costs up to four times as much as fossil fuels like coal and natural gas.

Currently, NV Energy, the state's utility monopoly, pays 3 to 5 cents per kilowatt-hour for natural gas and coal-fueled power, 8 to 10 cents per kWh for geothermal energy and for wind energy, and 11 to 13 cents per kWh for solar photovoltaic energy. Wind and solar photovoltaic energy also require backup power for "intermittency issues."

Sen. Reid's thumb-on-the-scale tactics for green energy aren't merely for subsidies. He also used his influence as Senate majority leader to delay and ultimately kill a state-of-the-art coal power plant planned for rural Nevada in 2009. Besides providing cheap, reliable energy, the privately financed plant would have created 200 permanent, full-time jobs.

In Nevada, more than $1.3 billion in federal grants and loans to "clean energy" power projects have led to fewer than 300 permanent jobs and energy costs up to four times more expensive than traditional energy sources like natural gas and coal.

And if this is the result in Nevada, which Sen. Reid likes to tout as the "Saudi Arabia of renewable energy," imagine the performance of green-energy subsidies in California and the rest of the country.

Rather than "Investing in American Jobs," perhaps a more candid slogan for Sen. Reid and Gov. Brown — and the entire push for federal and state handouts for renewable energy — would be "Investing in Higher Electricity Prices and Fewer Jobs."

The government's green-energy favoritism isn't a path to economic development. It's just another step down the road to serfdom.

Andy Matthews is president at the Nevada Policy Research Institute. For more visit http://npri.org. This article first appeared in the October 2012 edition of Nevada Business.

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Andy Matthews is the president of NPRI and has been with the Institute since February 2007. Andy is the fourth president in NPRI's history. He joined NPRI in February 2007 as its communications director and became a vice president at the Institute in 2008.